David Pearson may have been the Dominator at Darlington Raceway in his native South Carolina, but the NASCAR Hall of Famer had a home away from home in the Irish Hills of Michigan.

Pearson won 10 poles and nine races at Michigan International Speedway — both track records — and during his tenure with the Wood Brothers in the 1970s, he was all but invincible at the 2-mile track.

RELATED: Michigan schedule | More NASCAR 75 content

A master of the larger speedways, Pearson enjoyed the smooth surface and multiple racing lanes he found at Michigan, though that venue stood in marked contrast to rough, abrasive 1.366-mile Darlington, where he won a record 10 times.

In 1969, driving for Holman-Moody, the Silver Fox won the second of 105 NASCAR Cup Series races held so far at Michigan — from the pole, no less. In seven years with the Wood Brothers, from 1972-1978, he dominated the sprawling asphalt track the way no other driver has done since then.

During one stretch of nine Michigan races with the Woods, Pearson won seven times and finished second and third in the two races he didn’t win. From 1976 through 1979, he won six straight poles, the last coming during his one season with owner Rod Osterlund.

Though Pearson’s prolific success puts him at the top of the pyramid, his story is hardly unique. NASCAR Cup drivers who win at Michigan tend to do so multiple times as the history of the track attests.

NASCAR Hall of Famer Cale Yarborough, who won the first Michigan race in 1969, went on to win at the track Roger Penske built seven more times, ending with a sweep of the two 1983 races.

Fellow Hall of Famer Bill Elliott, who succeeded Yarborough as the Master of Michigan, was a seven-time winner at the speedway from 1984-1989. Elliott’s run included four straight victories comprised of season sweeps in 1985 and 1986.

Kyle Larson’s Cup career got the catalyst it needed at MIS. Driving for Chip Ganassi Racing, Larson won his first Cup race at Michigan in his 99th start in his second race at the track in 2016. He swept the two events of 2017, giving him three straight wins at the venerable speedway.

More recently, Kevin Harvick won his sixth Michigan race last year, breaking a 65-race drought in the process. Harvick, who will retire from Cup racing at season’s end, has won four of the last five races at MIS.

MORE: Kevin Harvick through the years | All of Kevin Harvick’s Cup Series victories 

Last year’s win proved a point for the 2014 Cup champion, who was emphatic in his post-race comments.

“Everybody who doubted us doesn’t know us,” said Harvick, who now has 60 Cup Series victories, second-most to Kyle Busch’s 63 among active drivers. “They obviously know we thrive in these types of situations. And a lot of things went our way, which we haven’t had all year long—have things go our way and have things fall our way.”

Thanks to Harvick’s resilience, Ford retained the Michigan Heritage Trophy for the fifth consecutive season. The award goes to the manufacturer with the best performance at MIS.

Ford drivers have won the last eight Michigan races, including Harvick’s sweep of both events on consecutive days during the restructuring of the schedule in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year, in NASCAR’s 75th anniversary season, Harvick looks to break another drought. He is winless since his triumph at Richmond in the 24th event of 2022.

Given the historical propensity of drivers to rack up impressive victory totals at the high-speed track, it might not be wise to bet against him.

Nu-Way Auto Parts 150

Lancaster Motorplex

  • Entry list
Car No. Driver Organization Crew Chief Chassis Mfg Sponsor
01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Racing, LLC Jake Marosz Troyer Pine Knoll Auto Sales
3 Bryan Narducci Boehler’s Racing Equipment Gregory Fournier Boehler Racing Florida Connection
4 Tim Connolly Connolly Racing Shane Connolly LFR Connolly Companies, LLC
5 Kyle Ebersole Bob Ebersole Bob Ebersole FURY Race Cars Ebersole Excavating Inc.; Technique Chassis
7 Doug Coby Tommy Baldwin Racing LLC Tommy Baldwin Troyer Mayhew Tools
16 Ron Silk Haydt Yannone Racing Philip Moran FURY Race Cars Blue Mountain Machine; Future Homes
18 Ken Heagy Robert Pollifrone Greg Gorman Chevrolet Buoy One Seafood
19 Anthony Sesely Wanick Construction Stephen Kopcik Troyer Wanick Construction Inc.
22 Kyle Bonsignore Kyle Bonsignore Cam McDermott FURY Race Cars Chalew Performance; MTT; Munns Auto
26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply Chad McDonald Chevrolet Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply
32 Tyler Rypkema Dean Rypkema Zach Truesdail FURY Race Cars Northeast Drilling, Musco Lighting
46 Anthony Nocella Goodie Racing Doug Ogiejko Troyer Riverhead Building Supply
51 Justin Bonsignore Kenneth Massa Motorsports LLC Ryan Stone FURY Race Cars Phoenix Communications Inc.
54 Tommy Catalano David Catalano David Catalano Troyer FX Caprara
60 Matt Hirschman Pee Dee Motorsports LLC Mike Stein Troyer Pee Dee Motorsports
64 Austin Beers KLM Motorsports Ron Yuhas Troyer Dell Electric, Lumiere Electrical, Andrew James Interiors, AP Marquadt & Sons, Hughes Motors
77 Max McLaughlin Mike Curb Gary Putnam Troyer Curb Records / Mohawk Northeast
109 Tommy Wanick Wanick Construction Mike Odwazny Troyer Wanick Construction Inc.
125 Mike Leaty Michael Leaty Jan Leaty Troyer Northeast Industrial Technologies
214 Chuck Hossfeld Advantage Motorsports LLC Billy Putney LFR Advantage Trucks; Anastasi Trucking

Following the disappointing postponement of the Clash at Claremont 150 last week, the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season will resume with the running of the Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 at Lancaster Motorplex this Saturday night (8 p.m. ET on FloRacing).

The event marks just the second time the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour will visit Lancaster Motorplex. The series made its inaugural trip to the facility in 2021, when the result came down to a dogfight between Patrick Emerling and Justin Bonsignore, with Emerling narrowly emerging as the winner in a photo finish.

Thanks to the efforts of Lancaster Motorplex officials as well as an unnamed benefactor, the Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 will feature an increased purse. The race winner will take home more than $13,000, which includes posted contingency awards. The race winner won’t be the only driver getting extra money, as the increased purse has been spread throughout the field, meaning every driver will take home a little extra prize money Saturday night.

To make things even better, a lap money program has also been instituted for Saturday’s race. The top three drivers of all sponsored laps will split $100 in memory of Zachary Hackett, the late son of Mike Myers, the owner of promotional company Speed Enterprises Entertainment.

Tickets to Saturday’s Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 are available here. Below is everything you need to know about the 10th race of the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.


Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 at Lancaster Motorplex

What to watch for:

The last time the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour competed at Lancaster Motorplex, Justin Bonsignore came agonizingly close to a trip to Victory Lane. That race, held in 2021, saw Patrick Emerling edge Bonsignore at the finish line by approximately half a car length.

Bonsignore, the winner of the most recent NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, returns to Lancaster with his sights set on earning the trip to Victory Lane that he narrowly missed out on two years ago. He won’t have to contend with Emerling, who will be busy racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series event Saturday at Michigan International Speedway.

He will have to contend with a driver who knows Lancaster perhaps better than anyone in Matt Hirschman. The driver from Northampton, Pennsylvania has won countless times at the New York oval and will look to add a NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour victory at the track to his resume.

MORE LANCASTER: Watch live on FloRacing | Get tickets

Ron Silk, who leads the series standings by eight points ahead of Bonsignore, will look to add to his championship lead with a strong run at Lancaster. Doug Coby and Austin Beers, each of whom have one victory this year, will look to get back in the championship fight with strong runs of their own. Max McLaughlin, who finished third two years ago at Lancaster, will be back in action in search of his maiden series win.

Several returning names are also set to join the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Lancaster. They include Chuck Hossfeld, a seven-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour winner, who will be making his season debut with the series. In three starts last year, Hossfeld earned two top-five finishes, including a runner-up result at Oswego Speedway.

Also joining the field will be Mike Leaty, the son of NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour legend Jan Leaty. The younger Leaty will be making just his sixth career NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour start, and he’ll be doing so with his father acting as his crew chief.

Other notable entries include Tommy Catalano, Anthony Nocella, Tyler Rypkema, Anthony Sesely, Kyle Ebersole and Bryan Narducci.

The complete entry list for the Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 is available here.

Fans wave to drivers during the start of the Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Lancaster Motorplex in Lancaster, New York on July 31, 2021. (Photo: Bryan Bennett/NASCAR)

RACE FACTS

Race Nu-Way Auto Parts 150
Date Saturday, Aug. 5, 2023
Track Lancaster Motorplex
Layout 0.625-mile paved oval
Location Lancaster, New York
Start Time 8 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Posted awards $108,995
Live stream FloRacing (Live)

Schedule: Saturday, Aug. 5 … Final practice from 2:15 to 3:15 p.m. ET … Qualifying at 5 p.m. ET … Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 at 8 p.m. ET (FloRacing).

Qualifying: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 is limited to 26 starters including Provisional Positions.

Tire allotment: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eleven (11) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event. The tire change rule is three (3) tires, any position.

RICHMOND, Va. — Chris Buescher was aglow in Victory Lane early Sunday evening at Richmond Raceway, soaking in a convincing, playoff-clinching win at a place where, not long ago, he said he wanted to cover over, fill with dirt and build housing on. “It seems like it sweeps your legs out every time we come here after the first stage,” he said, noting the track’s tendency to react and up the difficulty like a three-quarter-mile Cobra Kai.

Oh, how the opinions can flip, the result of what Buescher called a “massive leap” in progress by his RFK Racing team. Buescher was golden after the first stage, methodically climbing from a 26th starting spot on a day where position gains were hard-fought. Right there with him was his teammate and boss, Brad Keselowski, who also contended and ran 1-2 with Buescher in the race’s later segments before a wonky pit-stop entry shuffled him back to a sixth-place finish.

RELATED: Cup Series standings | Buescher clicks at Richmond

Keselowski and Buescher entered Sunday’s Cook Out 400 with a solid cushion on the plus side of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs hunt, one that only a historic collapse in the standings would unravel. Sunday’s victory placed an approval stamp on what’s been building the last two seasons at RFK Racing, but it also skipped past the unpalatable alternative of reaching the postseason by points.

“I’ve said that consistently,” Buescher said after netting his third Cup Series victory and his second under the RFK Racing banner. “We’ve talked about that as a team, that obviously, it has to be in the back of our minds because we are in a good spot in points. We’ve worked hard to have that consistency. But we’re not indestructible where we’re at, that a win would take care of everything.

“That’s our sport. Winning fixes everything. It fixes the points talk. It fixes morale. It fixes bad weekends. Everything can be changed by winning. From that standpoint, it’s awesome that we are in the playoffs. That was part of our goal at the beginning of the season. At RFK we talked about winning races, making the playoffs, and being able to be a contender in the playoffs. We don’t want to be a placeholder by any means either.”

The organization has undergone a recent transition in both performance and name, morphing from Roush Fenway Racing into the RFK banner when Keselowski became a part-owner before the 2022 campaign. The upswing has swelled memories of car owner Jack Roush’s heyday, when his mega-team was a regular winner on the Cup Series and fielded title-caliber efforts in both the Xfinity and Truck tours.

MORE: RFK Racing’s wins by driver

Recent markers have shown RFK inching back toward the team’s former glory. Buescher’s clinching effort Sunday resulted in the organization’s first playoff berth since Ryan Newman’s bid in 2019. The organization has led 415 laps through 22 races this season, just three shy of its laps-led total of 418 last year. Before Sunday, RFK hadn’t passed the 400-laps-led plateau in a season since 2013. Buescher and Keselowski have also finished in the top 10 together four times this year, the first time two drivers have each reached the mark since 2013.

“Certainly tremendous execution,” Keselowski said. “We wanted to win 1-2. That’s the ultimate goal. We didn’t get that, but we still had a heck of a day where we ran 1-2 at parts. This is kind of the next step for us, is to be able to win races on a contender basis. I told somebody, a lot of you guys here this year, we moved from irrelevant to relevant. The next step is to try to be contenders. You get to the contender status by winning races.

“We’re not where we want to be. We want to be where we win every week, we’re 1-2 finishing. This is another step in our progression and a lot to be proud of.”

The advancement from relevance to prominence is a movement that Keselowski hopes to keep rolling, and he’s quick to point out that he hasn’t done it alone. He also noted Sunday that the organization isn’t all the way there yet, even after one longtime scribe raised the question of whether RFK Racing was now the best team in the Ford camp.

“We’re positioning ourselves to get there one day, and I’m proud of that,” said Keselowski, acknowledging the modest inroads RFK has made against Ford heavyweights Team Penske and Stewart-Haas Racing. “That’s earned, right? You’ve got to earn that title. You do that with winning multiple races and contending for championships. We’re knocking on the door of that. Until we are walking in at Phoenix with three or four win stickers on our cars, it’s hard to say that we’re the best. That’s what we want to be.”

Eloy Sebastián López Falcón has spent his summer in an entirely new world.

The 17-year-old driver from Mexico City has spent the last few months racing a Legend car for Rev Racing at Charlotte Motor Speedway during the Summer Shootout.

Falcón, who was selected as part of the 2023 NASCAR Drive for Diversity class after capturing the 2022 NASCAR Mexico Truck Series championship, has faced an uphill battle adapting to a new style of racing while also learning an entirely new language.

“In Mexico, I drive in the NASCAR Mexico Series. It’s a big car, heavier,” Falcón said. “At Summer Shootout, it’s a small car and obviously on a small track. It’s like a sprint race here. I need to learn that part, how the car works, and obviously another barrier is that I don’t speak very good English.”

It’s hard for Falcón to take his experience in Mexico, which began in karting before he ultimately advanced into the NASCAR Mexico Truck Series, and translate it to what he’s been doing at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Eloy Sebastian López Falcón is in his first season with Rev Racing as part of the NASCAR Drive for Diversity program. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

Most of the events in Mexico take place on road courses, making the quarter-mile oval on the frontstretch at Charlotte Motor Speedway uncharted territory for Falcón.

Luckily, he’s been able to quickly adapt thanks to the support of the Rev Racing team as well as his driver coach, four-time NASCAR Mexico Series champion Rubén Garcia Jr.

“I go to the shop every day,” Falcón said. “I do my workouts at Rev Racing and obviously have our debrief after the race so we can see the points where we can be better. That’s the thing that is helping me to learn. Obviously, I have many people that help me with the knowledge that they have.

“Practice is very short. All the programs are very short. I need to adapt very fast to this car and learn. All the races have 25 laps. That’s a very short race. I need to improve a little more in qualifying. That’s a problem I have now. That is very difficult for me. In the races we are good. [The racing] is a very high level here.”

Without NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity program, Falcón likely never would have gotten the opportunity to race in the United States. He’s thankful for the opportunity that he hopes one day will lead him to the NASCAR Cup Series like his countryman, Daniel Suárez.

Eloy Sebastián López Falcón has been racing in the NASCAR Mexico Series while also competing at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Summer Shootout. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

“As a Mexican, this is a big opportunity to come here and make a dream come true,” Falcón said. “Obviously my dream is to be a Cup driver. It’s a big opportunity that the Drive for Diversity program gave to me.

“For me, I’m very proud to be a Mexican and obviously represent the Latino community.”

When the 2023 Summer Shootout season ends on Tuesday (watch live on FloRacing starting at 5 p.m. ET), Falcón’s racing season won’t be over.

In addition to his time at Summer Shootout, he’s also been racing in the NASCAR Mexico Series in the Challenge Series, where he recently earned his first victory at Autódromo Miguel E. Abed. He’s also hoping to make his Late Model debut later this year.

“When I finish the Summer Shootout I can see the possibility to [enter] some races in a Late Model,” Falcón said. “That’s a challenge for this year and to have a good season in the Summer Shootout.”

RICHMOND, Va. — Denny Hamlin nearly capped his milestone 50th NASCAR Cup Series victory the previous week at Pocono with an encore for win No. 51 Sunday at Richmond Raceway. His time spent near the front was a familiar refrain, and so was some chance contact along the way with Kyle Larson.

Hamlin finished second to eventual Cook Out 400 winner Chris Buescher, who scooted away from the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in the final restart with three laps left to win by 0.549 seconds. The result marked Hamlin’s fourth top-five finish in the last eight races, bumping him up to second in the Cup Series standings — 39 points back of JGR teammate Martin Truex Jr. in the hunt for the regular-season crown.

MORE: Race results | At-track photos: Richmond

After Daniel Suárez’s spin prompted a late caution period, Hamlin was set up front row in the outside lane for the final green-flag sprint to the end, a shift from the previous week’s choice where he posted up on the inside line for the decisive penultimate restart at Pocono, then drifted up to crowd fellow front-runner Larson into the outside wall. No such confrontation occurred at Richmond, and Hamlin lamented that he had “drove in way too deep” to make a challenge to Buescher’s lead stick.

“No. I appreciate that’s a good talking point. But, no, it was not,” Hamlin told NBC Sports after being asked if other drivers might take liberties with him after his restart move last week. “I’m out there trying to win the race for sure. I loved getting the front row. I just got a god-awful restart. Kyle (Busch) just pushed me down the front straightaway, which is really helpful for us. Thanks for that. I just didn’t do a good job on the restart. I didn’t do a good job into Turn 1 on the second-to-last lap. Our team gave us a shot.

“The race should have been (Buescher’s) anyway. The caution at the end … It was a second chance at life for us there at the end.”

The Pocono maneuver that propelled Hamlin to victory had been the topic of the day for a good week leading up to Sunday’s Richmond race. Hamlin found himself in the unusual situation of being booed during pre-race activities at what’s considered a hometown track, not far from his native Chesterfield, Virginia, just down the road. One fan’s harangue was punctuated with “I know you can hear me, Denny!” ringing out from the Turn 1 stands awkwardly during the quiet, solemn pause between the pre-race invocation and national anthem.

The move was also on the mind of Buescher’s veteran crew chief Scott Graves, who told his driver over the No. 17 team radio, “Don’t let the 11 do to you what he did to Larson,” before Sunday’s final restart. Graves smiled in admitting he was “probably being a little dramatic at that point” but also acknowledging his driver’s vulnerability had he selected the outside lane.

WATCH: Denny Hamlin breaks down final restart

As for the two Pocono protagonists, Hamlin excelled in a bid for his fifth Cup Series triumph at Richmond, while Larson and the rest of his Hendrick Motorsports mates struggled to find pace. Larson finished last on the lead lap in 19th place, but not before he gave Hamlin a slight nudge with 72 laps remaining, not long after a change for fresher tires.

Asked if that contact signified ‘message delivered’ or was emblematic of any new rules of engagement between the two, Larson said the move was hatched out of necessity and urgency.

“I mean, I’m just trying to maximize my time and they were two-wide in front of me and there was a little bit of a hole, and I shot through the hole,” Larson told NASCAR.com. “So just based off the kind of strategy we were on and trying to do what we could to, like I said, maximize the strategy of being on one stop, I just couldn’t waste any time.”

Hamlin’s side of their collision was even more plainspoken in his post-race availability.

“He was having a tough day and we were racing up front for a win,” Hamlin said. “It’s all good on my end, for sure.”

RICHMOND, Va. — Emotions ran high for Bubba Wallace on a steamy Sunday at Richmond Raceway, starting with a fitting tribute to the family of an associate and friend and ending with a generous gathering of points, but a finish that could have been even greater.

Wallace padded the advantage over his fellow NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs hopefuls in Sunday’s Cook Out 400, leading 80 laps and netting 16 extra points with top-five finishes in both stages. His 23XI Racing No. 23 Toyota was shuffled back on a final restart, and Wallace settled for a 12th-place result.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Richmond

The outcome helped him remain in 15th place in the provisional playoff picture, now 54 points clear of the elimination line — doubling his pre-race margin.

“Good points day,” he told his No. 23 group over the team communications on the cool-down lap, punctuating his last radio transmission with a heavy sigh.

Hearts were heavy, too, for the team from the start. Freddie Kraft, Wallace’s longtime spotter, missed Sunday’s race after the death of his father earlier in the week. Wallace taped over his name on the driver’s door before the race, replacing it with Tommy Kraft’s name in Sharpie. Kraft’s fellow spotters marked off his place in the spotters’ stand, and Wallace also paid tribute to Kraft and his family over the radio in pace laps.

“Once I get past the frustration, I know it was a really good day for us,” Wallace said on pit road post-race. “Emotional day. I just happened to look right at the door. Freddie’s dad passed away, so racing with a lot there. He was driving the s— out of it. You know, I told him at the start of the race, like I’m just gonna sit back and let him wheel it, and man, we were awesome.”

The strength of the performance was company-wide as 23XI Racing dominated the first half of the event. Tyler Reddick’s No. 45 23XI Toyota led every lap in Stage 1 from the pole position, and Wallace moved up from his fifth starting spot to take second at the green-checkered flag. The two teammates traded places at the start of Stage 2, and Wallace headed the field at a track where he’d only led one lap in 10 previous Cup Series starts.

His edge faltered slightly during a Stage 2 pit stop when the car failed to lift off the jack during the right-side tire change. Even with the extra time on pit road, Wallace recovered and still finished fourth at the break, telling his crew: “10-4, we’re fine. Let me work, it’ll come back to us.”

“Good day, but we were better than that,” said No. 23 crew chief Robert “Bootie” Barker. “We made a mistake. We still make some mistakes. I wish we’d get rid of those, but we’re getting better. But overall, a good day.”

Said Wallace: “Just had a hiccup of a pit stop, but just never really rebounded, recovered. Like, balance just went away. Man, it’s just hard. This place is tough, you know, finding the right line and the right balance, and we just fell off of it. So, one of the best here had the worst (final) restart — Harvick — and held us up, unfortunately, but it is what it is. We finished 12th. All in all, a good points day today. I don’t know where we’re at. We’ve got a pretty good gap, I’m assuming, so it’s good day.”

That margin provides some breathing room on a day when his closest pursuers had trouble. Michael McDowell remained in the 16th and final provisional playoff spot, and his buffer over the elimination line remained steady — now plus-18 and gaining a point on the outsiders — though he lost ground to Wallace.

McDowell led briefly for nine laps during a shake-up of pit sequences when the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports team opted for a one-stop strategy in the second stage (Laps 70-230), while most other competitors favored a two-stop plan. McDowell went from an 11th-place finish in Stage 1 to 23rd and one lap down by the end of Stage 2, with a sluggish stop compounding the lost ground. He finished 22nd.

“We had a way faster car than we’ve had in Richmond, and I think I just screwed it up, so I apologize to everybody who likes the 34 team,” said Travis Peterson, No. 34 crew chief, who said his wife had provided him a quick post-race update on where McDowell and the team now stood in his playoff pursuit. “… We didn’t really lose a lot of to the cut, and then we lost a lot to Bubba, and that’s where we needed to stay closer. I think we were looking at top 15, no problem. Like I said, I’m a little baffled at the moment why it didn’t work for us, but obviously, it didn’t. We had a fast enough car, we should’ve just done what everybody else did, and we’d have been fine. Definitely hurts right now. I gotta get back and digest it, but yeah.”

Other pursuers fared worse. Daniel Suárez started 33rd and ended there, running four laps off the pace at the end after his involvement in the race’s only on-track incident that prompted a caution flag. AJ Allmendinger, who started last after skipping Saturday’s qualifying for an Xfinity Series engagement at Road America, managed only a 27th-place run. Those troubles allowed rookie Ty Gibbs to move into the first spot out — 18 points back after his 15th-place Richmond finish — with four regular-season races remaining before the 16-driver postseason field is determined.

Both Wallace and McDowell were also helped by a playoff-clinching first victory of the season from Chris Buescher, who was ahead of them both in the standings — another factor that the No. 23 team kept close watch over with Sunday’s laps and the regular season winding down.

“I’m always aware,” Barker said.

Every 2023 race — except the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway —  is comprised of three stages — Stage 1, Stage 2 and the final stage. The Coca-Cola 600 added a fourth stage. Drivers who finish in the top 10 in Stage 1 and Stage 2 earn additional race points, with the winner of each stage earning 10 points, second place earning nine points, third place earning eight points, etc., down to one point for 10th place. Stage 3 of the Coca-Cola 600 awards points in the same manner as Stages 1 and 2 in the other races.

The final stage produces the race results and awards points across the field.

The All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway, an exhibition event, will not have stages or award points. And starting this season, road courses will still award points at the end of each stage, but those events will continue without a caution period.

Below is a cumulative running tally of how many stage points drivers have earned this year, as well as their stage wins — a stage win will provide an additional bonus point per win in the postseason.

RELATED: See remaining Cup Series schedule

Through Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, Race 24 of 36
Note: Does not include points earned for Bluegreen Vacations Duel races at Daytona International Speedway

Rank Driver Stage wins Stage points
1 Denny Hamlin 8 310
2 William Byron 9 294
3 Kyle Larson 8 277
4 Tyler Reddick 6 259
5 Martin Truex Jr. 6 250
6 Christopher Bell 4 240
7 Ryan Blaney 6 219
8 Brad Keselowski 6 214
9 Ross Chastain 5 204
10 Kevin Harvick 1 157
11 Joey Logano 3 146
12 Kyle Busch 2 135
13 Bubba Wallace 0 134
14 Chase Elliott 2 116
15 Chris Buescher 2 110
16 Daniel Suárez 0 108
17 Alex Bowman 0 105
18 Ty Gibbs 0 101
19 Michael McDowell 2 98
20 Austin Cindric 1 63
21 AJ Allmendinger 0 61
22 Austin Dillon 0 55
T-23 Chase Briscoe 0 54
T-23 Ryan Preece 1 54
25 Erik Jones 0 40
26 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 0 38
27 Aric Almirola 1 37
T-28 Shane Van Gisbergen 0 15
T-28 Justin Haley 0 15
T-30 Ty Dillon 0 14
T-30 Noah Gragson 0 14
32 Corey LaJoie 0 13
33 Todd Gilliland 0 8
34 Harrison Burton 0 6
35 Jimmie Johnson 0 4
36 Jordan Taylor 0 3
37 Jenson Button 0 1

RICHMOND, Va. – Chris Buescher capped RFK Racing’s dominant day at Richmond Raceway with a trophy, holding off the field on a restart with three laps remaining to win the NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out 400 Sunday afternoon – his and the RFK team’s first victory of the season.

Buescher and his teammate Brad Keselowski, a co-owner of RFK Racing, combined to lead a race-best 190-of-400 laps, with Buescher pacing the field for 88 circuits, the second-most he’s led in a race in his eight-year Cup career. And it all results in an important automatic bid into the 16-driver playoff field with only four races remaining in the regular season.

MORE: Race results | At-track photos: Richmond, Road America

Buescher’s No. 17 RFK Ford ultimately held off last week’s race winner Denny Hamlin by a slight 0.549-second margin, although Buescher had held more than a five-second advantage on Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota up until that caution flag flew for an accident involving Noah Gragson and Daniel Suárez in the closing laps.

“It was smooth sailing trying to take care of this Fastenal Mustang,” Buescher said with a smile. “It was so good and trying to take care of it there, and about the time (crew chief) Scott (Graves) said over the radio ‘It’s working perfect, keep it up,’ and then there’s a caution.

“But we were so strong during the race, I had a good feeling there about it. So awesome to pull it off. I’m proud of everybody. That was a long way from the back.’’

That late-race yellow flag was the only caution flag on the day other than the two stage breaks. And the afternoon racing at the Richmond 0.75-mile track was physically demanding under intense heat – over 130 degrees Fahrenheit inside the race car. Seventh-place finisher Martin Truex Jr. said smiling: “My cheek feels like it’s sunburnt. It was like a hair dryer blowing on you.’’

The 30-year-old Texas native Buescher, however, handled the heat and the field, starting 26th but steadily working his way forward en route to his third career Cup win. He first cracked into the top five by Lap 160 of the 400-lap race, chasing down then-leaders Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick, Keselowski and Hamlin.

Though the race featured so many green-flag laps, issues on pit road were what thwarted several winning efforts, not problems racing on the track.

Wallace’s 80 laps out front mid-race in the No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota marked the most laps led in a race in his career. But he ultimately had to play catch-up when his team had a slow tire change during a green-flag pit stop on Lap 175. He finished 12th.

With 56 laps remaining, race polesitter and Wallace’s 23XI teammate Reddick was flagged for a commitment-line violation coming to pit road for a green-flag stop at Lap 338, relegating him from running second to desperately trying to remain on the lead lap with the laps counting down. He finished 16th after leading 81 laps early – every lap of Stage 1 en route to claiming his fourth stage win.

Similarly, Keselowski suffered a misstep in the pits after his No. 6 RFK Ford led a race-best 102 laps. He made an awkward turn into his pit during a green-flag stop with 115 laps remaining, costing him just enough time to allow his teammate Buescher to take the lead with under 100 laps remaining.

“We wanted to finish one-two, that’s the ultimate goal, but we still had a heck of a day,’’ said Keselowski, who finished sixth and won Stage 2, his third stage win of the season.

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Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch – the all-time active winner at Richmond – finished third, his best showing on a short track this season. Team Penske’s Joey Logano rallied in the late laps to finish fourth, and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Ryan Preece turned in his best showing of the season with a fifth-place run.

Keselowski and Truex finished sixth and seventh, followed by SHR’s Aric Almirola, Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon and SHR’s Kevin Harvick. Chase Briscoe finished 11th, giving SHR one of its best full-team efforts of the season, with all four cars inside the top 11.

Every car in the 36-car field finished the race, the first time the full field was running at the end since 2018.

Buescher is now the 12th driver to win a race in 2023, leaving four playoff positions still available for a new winner or the top drivers in points. Harvick and Keselowski hold more than a 100-point advantage on the 16th-place elimination line. Wallace holds a 54-point advantage, and Front Row Motorsports driver Michael McDowell holds an 18-point buffer on Joe Gibbs Racing rookie Ty Gibbs for that 16th place. Kaulig Racing’s A.J. Allmendinger is 22 points behind McDowell.

Four races remain to settle the field for the 2023 NASCAR Playoffs. The series moves north next week for Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Harvick is the defending race winner.

Note: Post-race technical inspection concluded without issue, confirming Buescher as the race winner.

Kyle Larson won both short-track races on pavement this season, but for him to make it three in a row, he’ll likely need to get past teammate William Byron on Sunday at Richmond Raceway (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Byron moved past Martin Truex Jr. and to the top of the prediction board by leading practice on Saturday and qualifying sixth. Meanwhile, Truex will start 10th and Larson will roll off 14th.

Despite a strong Saturday, Byron will still have his work cut out for him if he is to nab his fifth victory of the season. That’s because Joe Gibbs Racing leads all organizations with 18 wins at Richmond, and in the last nine races at the 0.75-mile oval, Truex has three wins among his eight top-10 finishes. But a win would be big for Byron, who trails Truex by 30 points in the race for the regular-season championship.

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Larson did win here earlier in the season, to go along with his other short-track victory at Martinsville Speedway. Joey Logano is the only other driver besides Larson who has enjoyed a top-10 finish in both short-track races this season. Sunday figures to be another hotly contested race in the NASCAR Cup Series.

OTHERS TO WATCH

TYLER REDDICK: Reddick starts on the pole and leads a strong group of Toyotas. He hasn’t led a lap yet at Richmond, but Sunday figures to break that streak.

DENNY HAMLIN: Hamlin is coming off his dramatic 50th Cup win last week at Pocono Raceway. Plus, he has four career victories at Richmond.

KEVIN HARVICK: Harvick won here last year for Stewart-Haas Racing, the most recent of his 60 Cup Series victories, and he has four career Richmond wins.

KYLE BUSCH: He leads active drivers with six victories at Richmond and has completed all but one lap in his 35 Cup races at Richmond (14,028 of 14,029 laps in the 35 races).

CHRISTOPHER BELL: The driver of the No. 20 Toyota leads active drivers with an average finish of 5.67 at Richmond (for drivers with three or more starts).

Projections as of Sunday, July 30.

RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE COOK OUT 400

Racing Insights’ advanced statistical formula includes current track, current track type, recent performance, team data and pit-crew data to arrive at a projected winner and full race results.

FinishCar NumberDriver
124William Byron
219Martin Truex Jr.
311Denny Hamlin
45Kyle Larson
54Kevin Harvick
69Chase Elliott
722Joey Logano
820Christopher Bell
98Kyle Busch
106Brad Keselowski
1112Ryan Blaney
121Ross Chastain
1323Bubba Wallace
1445Tyler Reddick
1514Chase Briscoe
1617Chris Buescher
1748Alex Bowman
1810Aric Almirola
1954Ty Gibbs
2041Ryan Preece
213Austin Dillon
2299Daniel Suárez
2347Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
2416AJ Allmendinger
2534Michael McDowell
2638Todd Gilliland
2743Erik Jones
2821Harrison Burton
292Austin Cindric
3031Justin Haley
317Corey LaJoie
3242Noah Gragson
3377Ty Dillon
3451Ryan Newman
3578BJ McLeod
3615J.J. Yeley